economie

Don’t hate billionaires like Jeff Bezos — they make our lives better, 2 experts say

Jessica Flanigan is the Richard L. Morril Chair in Ethics and Democratic Values at the University of Richmond.

We also think people hold billionaires to higher moral standards than powerful public officials. There’s a widespread belief that governments should tax billionaires primarily and spend that money on public goods and anti-poverty programs. That is not how public officials spend most tax revenue, though, whereas billionaire philanthropy often focuses on providing public goods and helping the poorest people on Earth, not just people who live in their country.

How do you respond to critics who say it’s immoral, unfair, or just plain wrong that the likes of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos have amassed such vast wealth?

We can’t tell whether it’s fair for someone to have their wealth simply by looking at how much they have — we need to know how they got it. For instance, it’s wrong for someone to become a billionaire by stealing a billion dollars. However, if someone becomes a billionaire by producing goods and services that people are happy to buy, that’s a good thing.

Again, it’s important to notice the double standards. There are politicians who have amassed way more power and influence than most citizens ever will, but whether we think that’s unfair depends on how they got that power and what they do with it. In both cases, the bare fact of inequality isn’t itself a reason to call a distribution unfair.

Do any billionaires from the business world stand out for their contributions to people’s economic well-being?

Two examples are Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos. Jobs democratized personal computers, smartphones, and tablets. The iPhone and the iPad have had an enormous, positive impact on people’s ability to communicate, enjoy entertainment, access information, and more from virtually anywhere.

Bezos revolutionized the way people shop. The selection of goods available on Amazon.com is enormous and vastly exceeds what was available to ordinary consumers 20 years ago. Furthermore, Amazon makes it possible to shop from home, easily return packages, and automate recurring purchases. So not only does Amazon offer people an extraordinary amount of goods to buy, it saves them a significant amount of time as well.

It’s also worth emphasizing that these technological innovations didn’t only create thousands of jobs and contribute to economic growth. Apple products and Amazon’s retail services have been especially beneficial to people who were previously underserved by the market, such as people with disabilities and people who live in rural areas.

Is it redeeming when someone like Warren Buffett pledges to give away almost all their wealth, or does it not matter what billionaires do with their money?

What a billionaire does with their money matters, just like the rest of us. It’s morally good for middle-class Americans and billionaires to support effective charities. Market-made billionaires don’t need to redeem themselves, though, because being a billionaire isn’t morally wrong.

Chris Freiman is a business professor at West Virginia University.

There is also an important question about whether giving away their money rather than keeping it in productive investments does the most long-term good. Billionaires who invest their money benefit their fellow citizens, too.

Should governments take steps to reduce wealth inequality by taxing or otherwise redistributing the richest people’s fortunes?

Wealth inequality, as such, is not morally objectionable. What’s objectionable about the gap between rich and poor is the poverty, not the gap. After all, there’s a gap between multimillionaires and billionaires, but that’s not something to worry about. The US government doesn’t allocate much tax revenue to alleviating poverty; — much more goes to middle-class retirees. So this isn’t a strong argument for taxing billionaires. Moreover, increasing taxes may slow economic growth, which harms those in poverty over the long term.

What else should people reconsider when it comes to billionaires?

Instead of saying that every billionaire is a policy failure, we should instead embrace the idea that every billionaire is a policy success. People become billionaires by providing a product or service that is so valuable that millions of people are willing to pay for it voluntarily. Think of Taylor Swift or LeBron James as examples. They’ve enriched millions of fans’ lives through their hard work and talent.

When these billionaires make a big profit, it’s because they deliver big benefits. In contrast, public officials can only get most people to pay for the products and services they provide by threatening them.

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/jeff-bezos-wealth-billionaires-invention-jobs-inequality-philanthropy-poverty-government-2024-9